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Transcript
The Rate of Surplus Value, the
Composition of Capital, and the
Rate of Profit in the Chinese
Manufacturing Industry:
1978-2004
Zhang Yu and Zhao Feng
(Department of Economics, Renmin University of China)
Forthcoming in Bulletin of Political Economy
March, 2007
1. Introduction
 In the neoclassical economics, the overall level of
rate of profit plays a negligible role in the
determination of the dynamics of a capitalist
economy.
 Contrast to the view of neoclassical tradition, the
overall level of rate of profit occupied a central role
in the determination of the dynamics of a capitalist
economy in the classical economics and
especially in Marxian tradition theory.
How the rate of profit influences the dynamic
process of the economy
 the rate of profit reflects the capacity of the capitalist class
to accumulate capital
 the level of the rate of profit affects the accessibility of the
firms to the credit.
 share with the same view with Keynesian economics
tradition, the rate of profit figures the expectation of the
capitalist
 →Thus to Marxian theory, the performance of capitalist
economies depends above all else on the overall level of
the rate of profit.
2. An Overview of Previous
Studies
 Theories of the Movement of Rate of
Profit
 Marxian Empirical Investigations on the
Movement of the Rate of Profit
P
M—
 Q—

—
 L 
—
 M ' ( M  M )
buy  production
sale
2.1 Theories of the Movement of
Rate of Profit
process
P
M—
 Q—

—
 L 
—
 M ' ( M  M )
buy  production
sale
process
Stage 1:
Prepare
for
the
capitalist production
Stage 2: Produce the new
product and at the same time
transfer and create new value
Stage 3: Realization
of value of product
In order for capitalists to draw profits they must pass successfully through
the different phases of the circuit of capital. In fact, different theories of
the movement of the rate of profit emphasize the problems in each of the
three phases of the circuit of capital.
2.1.1 Rising Organic Composition of Capital as the Main
Cause of Falling Rate of Profit
 in the capitalist system, the most essential relationship is the
relationship between capitalist class and working class and this
relationship is essentially antagonistic. This antagonistic relationship
roots deep into the capitalist production process: the use of workers’
labor power is the only source of the new created value, and what the
capitalist get is just what the workers create and exceeds the value of
the labor power. That is the relationship between them is exploit
relation. In the term of modern game theory, the relationship between
them in the problem of dividing-new-created-value is zero-sum game.
To be dominating in the process of dividing the new created value, the
capitalist must control the production process. And this effort leads to a
progressive mechanization of the process of production. This inevitably
leads to the rate of profit to fall
2.1.2 Profit-Squeeze as the Main Cause of
Falling Rate of Profit
 theories of profit-squeeze shifts its focus from the
second stage of the circulation of capital to the
first stage of the circulation
 define the rate of profit as the ratio of the total
revenue of the capitalist to the rate of the value of
the advanced capital
r
R Y  Y W
 
Y K  Y
 Y  W
   1 
 K  Y
 Y

 K
 among the two variables, and , which can
affect the rate of profit, the theories of profitsqueeze believe that the raising WY is the main
cause of the falling of the rate of profit. And this
W
raising Y is rooted in the relative increase strength
of the working class. This relative increase in the
strength of working class roots in the change of
the social-economic structure of the capitalist
system.
W
Y
Y
K
2.1.3 Realization Problem as the Main
Cause of the Falling Rate of Profit
 The third effort to explain the movement of the rate of
profit focuses on the third stage of the circulation of
capital, i.e. the realization of the created value.
 We can redefine the rate of profit as the rate of realized
surplus value to the total advanced capital
r
 S
C V
in which  is the proportion of product that have been
sold .
 why  will fall below 1 :Underconsumption Coordination
failure
2.1.4 The Increasing Use of Unproductive Labors
as the Main Cause of the Falling Rate of Profit
 It focus mainly on structure of the circulation of capital as a
whole
 The concepts of productive labor and unproductive labor are
based on the labor theory of value of Marxian economics.
According to Marx, only those labor which are involved in the
capitalist production is the productive labor, and “capitalist
production” refers to those activities which produce, transport or
store commodities. In the framework of Marxian theory, only
productive labor can transfers the value embedded in the
production materials and creates new value (include surplus
value). And the unproductive labor involves circulating activities
and supervising activities and this kind of activities do not
transfer old value or create new value. The even the value of
those materials and the labor power involved in those activities
must be recovered by the surplus value transfer from the
productive sectors.
 we assume that the only factor needed by unproductive activities is
labor power and the wage bills are paid after the value of the
commodities have been realized. Thus we redefine the rate of profit as
R S U
r 
C
C
After some algebraic calculation, we get

S V   U V 
r
C V 
It is clear that given the rate of surplus value and organic composition
of capital, the rate of profit declining with the rising ratio of
unproductive labor to productive labor.
2.2 Marxian Empirical Investigations on the
Movement of the Rate of Profit
2.2.1 The Difficulties to Put Marxian Law Testable
 Labor time or Money
 Only capitalist production or all production
 Should we distinguish unproductive
activities from productive activities
 How to define variable capital
2.2.2 Some Important Empirical Estimation
What those studies share



All of those studies agree that the dynamics of the capitalist
economy is determined by the overall level of the rate of profit.
All of those studies agree that the stagnation and depression of
capitalist world after 1970s is not as sudden as it looks like, just as
what the neoclassical theories alleged that it was the consequence
of some sudden shocks, such as the oil supply shock, the
mistakes of monetary authority. But it was the consequence of the
long-run decline of the overall level of rate of profit. Recently the
relative resurgence of advanced capitalist economy is also
stimulated by the relative recovery of the rate of profit at the cost of
the benefit of working class.
To those studies which tempt to explain the Great Depression, it
was also the long-term decline of rate of profit that caused the
economic tragedy.
2.2.2 Some Important Empirical Estimation
The divarication under the common consensus
 Lipietz (1986), Dumenil and Levy (1993, 2002) :rising
organic composition of capital
 Glyn and Sutcliffe (1972), Weisskopf (1979), Bowles,
Gordon , and Weisskopf (1986), Weisskopf , Bowles , and
Gordon (1983) and Weisskopf (1992)/Kotz (2003) and
Wolfson (2003) /James Devine (1983) :profit-wage-share
 Dumcnil, Glick, and Rangel (1987) :realization
 Moseley (1992; 2003), Shaikh and Tonak (1994), and
Mohun (2005) :productive-unproductive-labor
3. Empirical Investigation on
Chinese Economy (Manufacturing
Industry) in the Framework of
Marxian Theory
3.1 The Methodological Problems in Applying Marxian
Theory to Analyze Chinese Economy
 Can we use the Marxian categories safely to
analyze Chinese economy?
 Why only manufacturing industry?
 How to deal with unproductive-productive
labor?
3.2 The Analytical Framework and
Definitions of Corresponding Variables
 The rate of profit is defined as
the ratio of profit to the total
capital
 The rate of surplus is defined as
the ratio of total profit to total
worker compensation
 We just simply define the ratio of
constant capital to variable
capital valued in current price as
organic composition of capital,
and the ratio of constant capital
to variable capital valued in
constant price as technical
composition of capital
r
s
s

K

W

W




pk  k

wl
 V

V W
K pk  k
 
W
wl
k

l

 1 V
 
V w l
 From those definitions we can get one basic equations that
can help us understanding the movement of rate pf profit in
the Marxian framework
l w
r   s
k pk
the first term is the inverse of technical composition of
capital, the second is the reverse of relative price between
capital and labor, the last is rate of surplus.
3.3 The Trend of Rate of Profit, the Growth Rate
of Real GDP and Value-added in Manufacturing
Industry
 The trend of rate of profit
We can divide the trend of rate of profit into three periods.
The first period is from 1978 to 1988. In this period, the rate
of profit had a very slight trend to decline. In fact it
fluctuated between 38% and 31% in those years. The
second period is from 1989 to 1998 in which the rate of
profit declined relative sharply. It declined from 26% in
1989 to 13% in 1998. The third period is from 1999 to 2004
in which the rate of profit increased steadily. The rate of
profit increased from 19% to 31% which near its peak level
in 1978.
Figure 1 the Trend of Rate of Profit,1978-2004
.4
.3
.2
.1
1978
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
2002
The Trends of Rate of Profit and the Growth Rate of Real GDP
 Firstly, we can see from Fig.2 that before 1984, in the initial period of reform,
the general level of rate of profit had nearly no direct effect on the growth of
real GDP. With the deepening of economic reform process, the comovement
between the rate of profit and the growth of real GDP became more and
more clear. And the movement of rate of profit keeps ahead of the growth
rate of real GDP relatively.
 In the period from 1984 to 1990 when the rate of profit declined almost a half,
from 35% to 19%, the growth rate of real GDP declined 74%, from 15% in
1984 to 4% in 1990. And in the period from 1993 to 1998 when the rate of
profit decreased smoothly from 21% to 13%, the growth of real GDP
declined from 13% to 8% in 1998 and 7% in 1999. When the rate of profit
increased slowly in the late of 1990s, the overall growth rate is also
recovered steadily.
 The louses of rate of profit and growth rate of real GDP show a strong
empirical support what we argue for that the Marxian categories can be
applied to analyze Chinese economy. And the relationship between them is
fairly fit what the theory predicts.
Figure 2 the Trend of Rate of Profit and the Growth Rate of Real GDP
.5
.16
.4
.12
.3
.08
.2
.04
.1
1978
.00
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
2002
3.4 The Deconstructing the Trend
in Rate of Profit
 the technical and organic composition of capital: As shown in
Figure 3, the organic composition only has a very slight trend to decline from
1978 to 2004. Especially in the period between 1990 and 2002, the organic
composition of capital fluctuated around 3 in a very small range. So the factor
of organic composition of capital contributed little to the fluctuation in rate of
profit from 1978 and 2004.
 The organic composition of capital is determined by to
underlying factors, the technical composition of capital and
the ratio of relative price between labor and capital, in our
definition. And from 1978 to 2004, the level of industrialization of China
increased dramatically. This can be clearly found in Figure 3. The locus of
technical composition of capital increased steadily in this period, except the last
two years. But the effect of increasing technical composition of capital is offset
by increasing ratio of average worker compensation to inverse of deflator of
capital. This leads us to focus on the trend of rate of surplus value.
Figure 3 the Trend of Organic and Technical Composition
of Capital, and the Relative Price, 1978-2004
6
3.0
5
2.5
4
2.0
3
1.5
2
1.0
1
0.5
0
1978
0.0
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
2002
The Rate of Surplus value and its decomposition
 It is shown that we can divide the period from
1978 to 2004 into two sub-periods. In the first subperiods, from 1978 to 1998. At the initial year of
the first sub-period, the rate of surplus value is
relatively steady, and after that time, it declined
quickly from 1.35 in 1983 to 0.4 in 1998. And its
decline attributed mainly to the decline in rate of
profit in this period. After 1998 the rate of surplus
value increased gradually and this cause the rate
of profit rising correspondingly.
Figure 4 the Rate of Surplus from 1978-2004
1.6
.5
1.2
.4
0.8
.3
0.4
.2
0.0
1978
.1
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
2002
 The productivity of labor and average worker compensation both
increased steadily, but the divergence between them became
more and more great. The change of share of profit can be
divided into three parts: from 1978 to 1983, it nearly did not
change; and then in the sequential period, it declined from 57%
in 1983 to 28% in 1998, nearly decreased 30%; and from 1998 to
now, the share of profit increased lowly, from 28% to 41% in 2004,
recover nearly a half of previous decline.
 From 1978 to the middle of 1990s, since the divergence between
the productivity of labor and the average worker compensation is
neglectable, the change in the rate of surplus value attributed
mainly to the decline in the share of profit. And in the sequencial
period, the rise of surlus value attributed to two factors: firstly, in
this period the decling trend of share of profit was inversed and
this contributed a great part of the recovery of rate of surplus
value, hence the rate of profit; and the divergence between
productivity and compensation of labor also contributed a large
part of the rise of rate of surplus value, from 1998 to 2004 the
productivity increased nearly 187%, however the average worker
compensation increased only 134%.
Figure 5 the Share of Profit, the Average Worker
Compensation and the Productivity of Labor, 1978-2004
10
.7
8
.6
6
.5
4
.4
2
.3
0
1978
.2
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
2002
IV. Conclusion/main finds
 the rate of profit in manufacturing industry is a fairly good indicator for
the growth rate of real GDP. We argue that this rate of profit is a fairly
good substitutor for the overall level of rate of profit which can not be
estimated accurately for lack of appropriate data in macroeconomic
level.
 in the period from 1978 to 1998, the rate of profit declined from 38% to
13%. And in the sequential period, it resurged gradually.
 the organic composition of capital which had no systematical up or
down trend in the period contributed little to the fluctuation of the rate of
profit. Despite the technical composition of capital increased sharply, the
relative decline of capital price offset its effect.
 the decline and sequential resurgence of rate of profit attributed to the
change in the rate of surplus value.
 the decline of rate of surplus value, hence the rate of profit from 1978 to
1998 attributed mainly to the decline in the share of profit. But its
resurgence from 1998 to 2004 affected by two main factors: firstly, the
increasing in the share of profit remain played an important role in this
process; secondly, in this period the increase of productivity of labor
overcame the inverse-direction effect of rising worker compensation on
the rate of surplus.
 The empirical investigation support the Marxian argument
that the performance of capitalist economies depends
above all else on the overall level of the rate of profit. But
not support other arguments of Marx himself, such as the
decline of rate of profit, and the rising organic composition
of capital as a main cause of this decline. On the contrary,
the organic composition had no systematical trend and the
fluctuation in rate of profit attributed mainly to the change in
rate of surplus value.
 Limitations: Maybe the most serious one is that we limit our
estimation in manufacturing industry only. The second is
that we do not consider the different between unproductive
labor and productive labor which is very important to
estimate the Marxian categories. The last one is that we do
not estimate the effect of effective demand on the rate of
profit. It is affirmative that we include those factors into our
analysis and this is also the aim of our further studies.
Further Considerations
 the miracle of neoliberalism:
 China: 1998-2004 vs. USA: 1990-2000
more tighten labor market
fewer welfare projects etc.
 Thank You
谢谢